DILI, Sept 4 (Reuters) - The U.N. mission in East Timor said on Thursday it
expected the country's police force to take over full responsibility for
security from the international force by May 2009.

The U.N. mission (UNMIT) deployed some 1,500 police officers this year to
support East Timor's national police force of 3,000 local officers, leading
security measures and providing training.

East Timor has been struggling to get back on its feet after the army tore
apart along regional lines in 2006. A group of 600 soldiers were then sacked,
triggering violence that killed 37 people and drove 150,000 from their homes.

East Timor President Ramos-Horta was shot and seriously wounded at his home
in the capital Dili in an assassination attempt by rebel soldiers on Feb. 11.
Prime Minister Xanana Gusmao escaped injury in another shooting on the same day.

"We will stay together with Timor police to accompany this transition
and to assist in the first step of working independently from U.N. police,"
UNMIT's acting police commissioner Juan Carlos Arevalo told journalists in Dili.